Motorola Mobility, Inc. v. Apple, Inc.
Filing
94
NOTICE by Motorola Mobility, Inc. of Filing Brief on Claim Construction (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit, # 2 Exhibit, # 3 Exhibit, # 4 Exhibit, # 5 Exhibit, # 6 Exhibit, # 7 Exhibit, # 8 Exhibit, # 9 Exhibit, # 10 Exhibit, # 11 Exhibit, # 12 Exhibit, # 13 Exhibit, # 14 Exhibit, # 15 Exhibit, # 16 Exhibit, # 17 Exhibit, # 18 Exhibit, # 19 Exhibit, # 20 Exhibit, # 21 Exhibit, # 22 Exhibit, # 23 Exhibit, # 24 Exhibit, # 25 Exhibit, # 26 Exhibit, # 27 Exhibit, # 28 Exhibit, # 29 Exhibit, # 30 Exhibit, # 31 Affidavit)(Giuliano, Douglas)
Exhibit 24
to Motorola’s Opening Claim Construction Brief
July 28, 2011
DICTIONARY OF
DATA COMMUNICATIONS
Second Edition
CHARLES J. SIPPL
A HALSTED PRESS BOOK
JOHN WILEY & SONS
NEWYORK TORONTO
EXHIBIT 24
PAGE 1
© The Macmillan Press Ltd, 1985
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted, in any
form or by any means, without permission.
First published in Great Britain 1985 by The Macmillan Press Ltd.
Published in the U.S.A. by Halsted Press,
a Division of John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York
First edition published 1976
ISBN 0-470-20182-7
Printed in Great Britain
EXHIBIT 24
PAGE 2
4 active file
active file: A file which is being used in
which entries or references are made on a
current basis.
adaptive tree walk protocol: A limited
contention protocol with stations organized
in a binary tree.
active intruder: An intruder who can
record messages to hear later, send his own
messages on the desired communication
channel, or alter legitimate messages before
they reach the intended receiver.
add time (in microseconds); The time
required to acquire from memory and execute one fixed-point add instruction using
all features such as overlapped memory
banks, instruction look-ahead and parallel
execution.
active master file: A specific master file
that contains items relatively active or
frequently used as contrasted to static or
reference items.
active master item: The most active items
on a master file by usage data.
active network: A electronic network
which contains any sources of power other
than signal inputs .
active state: The state of an interrupt level
that is the result of the central processor
starting to process an interrupt condition.
active transducer: Any transducer in
which the applied power controls or modulates locally supplied power, which
becomes the transmitted signal, as in a
modulator, radio transmitter.
activity level: The value taken by a structural variable in an intermediate or final
solution to a programming problem.
actuating signal: A particular input pulse
in the control circuitry of computers.
An association of U.S. and
ADAPSO:
Canadian data processing service organizations.
add-on: Hardware attached to a computer
to increase performance or memory.
add/subtract time: The time required to
perform an addition or subtraction. exclusive of the time required to obtain the
quantities from storage and put the sum or
difference back into storage.
EXHIBIT 24
PAGE 3
add-to-storage concept: The process in
which the sum of two numbers is calculated
by adding the first number to the second and
the results replace the second number (all in
one operation) .
adder-subtracter: (ISO) A device that
acts as an adder or subtracter depending
upon the control signal received. The
adder-subtracter may be constructed so as
to yield the sum and the difference at the
same time.
addition without carry: A logical operation applied to two operands that produce a
result relying on the bit patterns of the
operands and according to rules for each bit
position.
A character which is
neither a letter nor a number. but which is
usually a punctuation mark, %, - , #; i.e.,
a member of a specialized alphabet. A
specific meaning is assigned to this character to use it to convey special infonoation.
additional character:
additional label processing: The use of the
input/output label system to verify or create
a standard label and then, by user's
routines , verify or insert additional
information in the optional field of the
standard label.
address: 1. A character or group of
characters that identifies a register. a panicular pa'tt of storage, or some other data
source or destination. 2. To refer to a device
or an item of data ~y its address.
address, control data, and checksum
fields: Four kinds of fields in bit oriented
protocol frames.
I
!
AFIPS
address comparator: A device used to
verify that the correct address is being read.
The comparison is made between the
address being read and the specified
address.
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